Summer is upon us, and now here's another musical wonder to look forward to: every two weeks, the Recording Academy will debut a new installment of ReImagined, a video series where artists bring a fresh take on classic GRAMMY-winning/nominated songs by their favorite artists—from the Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year, Best Rock Song, Best R&B Song and Best Rap Song categories.

15-year-old ranchera singer Ángela Aguilar grew up in the music industry, coming from a long lineage of powerful performers, including her father Pepe Aguilar. She has already grown into a big name herself, with a massive following (1.5 million followers on Instagramalone) but she's admitted that she'd still be star struck if she met Lady Gaga, of whom she's a big fan.

Now, with the latest episode of ReImagined, which you can watch below, Aguilar pays tribute to the pop queen, offering a moving one-woman cover of Gaga and Bradley Cooper's GRAMMY-winning hit "Shallow," from their Oscar-winning film A Star Is Born.

Jul 23, 2019 – 10:24 am

Angela Aguilar Covers Lady Gaga's "Shallow"

Aguilar may be as just as excited about this video as her many fans are. She first teased the performance last month during a news interviewwith TV Azteca, where she was very thrilled to have permission to offer her take on the emotional song.

Also for the 61st GRAMMYs, Aguilar earned her first nomination, for Best Regional Mexican Music Album (Including Tejano) for her debut solo album, Primera Soy Mexicana. She also, along with Aida Cuevas and Natalia Lafourcade, stole the show during the GRAMMY Premiere Ceremony, with their rendition of the classic Spanish language song "La Llorna." Aguilar also earned her first Latin GRAMMY nominations in 2018, for Best New Artist and Best Ranchero/Mariachi Album.

Madison Beer Covers Corinne Bailey Rae: ReImagined

Above, you can watch the L.A.-based, New York-born singer take on the GRAMMY-nominated 2006 feel-good bop. "Put Your Records On" was Bailey Rae's second single, which charted in both the U.K. and U.S., from her self-titled debut album. The uplifting track was nominated for Record Of The Year and Song Of The Year at the 49th GRAMMY Awards, where she also got a nod for Best New Artist.

Beer has a debut album of her own on the way this year to follow up her 2018 EP, As She Pleases. She released the LP's catchy lead single "Dear Society" in May. The 20-year-old is one to watch—back when she was just 13, Justin Bieberdiscovered her YouTube covers of icons like Etta James, tweeting about her to his huge fan base and helping connect her with a record deal.

Don't forget to subscribe to our newsletter on GRAMMY.com and to our YouTubechannel and visit our videopage to watch each ReImagined episode, along with other exclusive content, as it's released.

The next installment of ReImagined, featuring 20-year-old vocal powerhouse Madison Beer, arrives on Tuesday, Sept. 3 at 10 am PST, but you can catch a special sneak peek of the episode below.

Aug 29, 2019 – 10:09 am

Preview Madison Beer Covering Corinne Bailey Rae

The L.A.-based, New York-born pop singer covers British R&B songstress Corinne Bailey Rae's GRAMMY-nominated 2006 feel-good bop "Put Your Records On" for the occasion. The sunny song earned Bailey Rae nominations for Record Of The Year and Song Of The Year at the 49th GRAMMY Awards, where she also got a nod for Best New Artist.

Make sure to check out the special preview above, and catch Beer's full ReImagined performance on YouTube or GRAMMY.com on Tuesday, Sept. 3 at 10 am PST / 1 pm ET. You can even set a reminder to tune in for the premiere by visiting the YouTube page now.

While you're at it, don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel and visit our video page to watch each ReImagined episode, along with other exclusive content, as it's released.

Sneak Peek: Angela Aguilar ReImagines "Shallow"

The young GRAMMY and Latin GRAMMY nominee has been a Gaga and A Star Is Born fan for a while now. In fact, right before the 61st GRAMMY Awards, the young ranchera singer told the Recording Academy how she hoped she'd run into the pop icon on Music's Biggest Night:

"I saw this movie called A Star Is Born where Lady Gaga performs, and that was one of the best things I've ever seen," she said at the time. "I haven't cried that much in a movie since, like, Bambi. I feel like if I see her I'm gonna kind of have like a starstruck moment. I never get starstruck because I've been in the industry for so long, and I live in Los Angeles. It's everywhere. But with her I think I might get a little antsy."

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